Fortune's Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency

Fortune's Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency

by Daniel Heller-Roazen
Fortune's Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency

Fortune's Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency

by Daniel Heller-Roazen

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Overview

Arguably the single most influential literary work of the European Middle Ages, the Roman de la Rose of Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun has traditionally posed a number of difficulties to modern critics, who have viewed its many interruptions and philosophical discussions as signs of a lack of formal organization and a characteristically medieval predilection for encyclopedic summation. In Fortune's Faces, Daniel Heller-Roazen calls into question these assessments, offering a new and compelling interpretation of the romance as a carefully constructed and far-reaching exploration of the place of fortune, chance, and contingency in literary writing.

Situating the Romance of the Rose at the intersection of medieval literature and philosophy, Heller-Roazen shows how the thirteenth-century work invokes and radicalizes two classical and medieval traditions of reflection on language and contingency: that of the Provençal, French, and Italian love poets, who sought to compose their "verses of pure nothing"in a language Dante defined as "without grammar," and that of Aristotle's discussion of "future contingents" as it was received and refined in the logic, physics, theology, and epistemology of Boethius, Abelard, Albert the Great, and Thomas Aquinas.Through a close analysis of the poetic text and a detailed reconstruction of the logical and metaphysical concept of contingency, Fortune's Faces charts the transformations that literary structures (such as subjectivity, autobiography, prosopopoeia, allegory, and self-reference) undergo in a work that defines itself as radically contingent. Considered in its full poetic and philosophical dimensions, the Romance of the Rose thus acquires an altogether new significance in the history of literature: it appears as a work that incessantly explores its own capacity to be other than it is.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801881558
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2004
Series: Parallax: Re-visions of Culture and Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Daniel Heller-Roazen is an assistant professor of comparative literature at Princeton University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Citations
Introduction: The Sense of a Book
1. Inventio Linguae: The Language of Contingency
2. The Nameless Lover, or The Contingent Subject
3. Fortune, or The Contingent Figure
4. Through the Looking-Glass: The Knowledge of Contingency
Conclusion: Diverse Verses
Notes
Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

Giorgio Agamben

Daniel Heller-Roazen's elegant book is a model of theoretical acumen and critical sensibility, and it demonstrates brilliantly how philosophy and philology can work together to offer an entirely new reading of a classic work.

Giorgio Agamben, University of Verona

From the Publisher

Daniel Heller-Roazen's elegant book is a model of theoretical acumen and critical sensibility, and it demonstrates brilliantly how philosophy and philology can work together to offer an entirely new reading of a classic work.
—Giorgio Agamben, University of Verona

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